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Startling reduction

Per capita availability of beef in 2012 will be down to just 54.3 pounds according to USDA estimates. That is a startling 17 percent reduction since 2007 when high corn prices (and drought more recently) sent the beef industry into a liquidation tailspin.

"Foreign markets are buying a record amount of beef at record high prices. USDA now expects a record 2.7 billion pounds of beef to be exported this year, representing a record 10 percent of domestic production," he said.

A new record is expected to be set next year with 11 percent of production moving to foreign consumers. In sharp contrast, in 2007 only 5 percent of production was exported when the U.S. was still in the grips of lost exports due to BSE discoveries beginning in late 2003.

According to Hurt, U.S. equity markets were concerned about the European debt crisis and slow global economic recovery in August and September. There was even some talk of a potential repeat of the global financial crisis that had occurred in the fall of 2008.

Although the European concerns have not been solved, markets have reduced the odds of the doomsday outlook, and the S&P 500 has rallied 14 percent since the first trading day of October.

Hurt said that finished cattle prices are expected to trade in the low $120s for the rest of this year and increase modestly in the winter. The 2012 spring price rally is expected to increase prices to the higher $120s for March, April and May, with summer prices cooling to the mid-$120s. Record annual prices are expected for 2012, averaging in the low to mid-$120s, compared to the previous record, which will be set this year near $115.

"The high level of September calf placements was a demonstration that corn futures prices below $6 per bushel were too low and created opportunities for end users such as cattle finishers to lock in favorable financial returns. It is the first indication from the animal sector that there is a rebuilding of corn use now due to 'low' corn prices," he said.

Hurt said the optimism of the cattle industry probably suggests that corn prices will have continued upward mobility to equate costs with potential livestock returns.

"The same can be said for the pork industry and again brings into question the low level of corn feeding that USDA continues to use in their supply and demand estimates," he said. "They have feed and residual use down 2 percent while animal numbers and use appear to be closer to up 2 percent."

If this is so, this represents an added 150 to 200 million more bushels for feed use. In addition, slightly smaller corn use for ethanol reduces distiller's availability. Added to the accumulating corn demands of the animals industries are very strong margins for the ethanol industry and their ability to pay much more for corn than current prices, he said.